Russia and China deployed their largest joint maritime patrol mission off the coast of Alaska
The Department of Defense confirmed that 11 vessels approached the U.S. islands in the Bering Sea in unprecedented numbers.
A joint Russian and Chinese flagged naval operation patrolled the waters near the Aleutian Islands of Alaska this past week, according to allegations by the state's two senators and as confirmed by the Department of Defense (DOD). According to defense experts, this is the largest naval deployment of the Russia-China axis off the U.S. coast.
According to a statement issued by Alaska Senators Lisa Murkowski and Dan Sullivan, 11 ships patrolled near the Aleutian Islands last week. According to information that the legislators were able to verify, the U.S. Navy sent four destroyers along with a maritime surveillance aircraft to track the Russian and Chinese vessels’ movement.
The senators' statement claims that the foreign vessels sailed in U.S. waters. However, statements from the Northern Command collected by the Wall Street Journal contradict this and claim that the Russian and Chinese vessels did not enter U.S. waters and sailed along coordinates of international waters.
The maritime patrol coincides with a period of tension between the United States and the Eastern Axis. This patrol, which is the strongest and largest to date, according to Brent Sadler, is a consequence of the Biden administration's foreign policy.
The White House recently announced it would issue a new military aid package to the government of Taiwan, which has caused friction with China. The White House also increased its 2024 defense budget to be able to offer Ukraine more aid in its fight against Russia.
Despite this, the Chinese embassy denied that its joint patrols with Russia have any deterrent objective or are aimed at intimidating the United States. "According to the annual cooperation plan between the Chinese and Russian militaries, naval vessels of the two countries have recently conducted joint maritime patrols in relevant waters in the western and northern Pacific Ocean. This action is not targeted at any third party and has nothing to do with the current international and regional situation," the Chinese Embassy spokeswoman in Washington told the Wall Street Journal.